When Does FAFSA Open for 2026–26? Key Dates and What to Do First
When does FAFSA open for 2026-26? The 2026-26 FAFSA opened December 1, 2026. The 2026-27 FAFSA opens December 1, 2026. What to do before it opens.

FAFSA Opening Dates — All Aid Years
- Opened: December 1, 2024
- Tax data used: 2023 federal tax return (prior-prior year)
- Federal deadline: June 30, 2026
- Opens: December 1, 2025
- Tax data used: 2024 federal tax return
- Federal deadline: June 30, 2027
- Typical range: January – May of the spring before the aid year
- Earliest: Some states: December opening day or January
- Risk of missing: Permanent loss of state grants — no recovery
- Old opening: October 1 (prior schedule, discontinued)
- New opening: December 1 each year (since 2023)
- Why changed: FAFSA Simplification Act — aligns with prior-prior year tax filing

FAFSA Opening Dates by Aid Year
The FAFSA now opens on December 1 every year for the following academic year's aid. This schedule was established by the FAFSA Simplification Act and replaced the previous October 1 opening that was in effect from 2016 through 2022.
Current and upcoming FAFSA opening dates:
- 2024–25 FAFSA: Opened December 31, 2023 (delayed due to FAFSA Simplification rollout issues)
- 2025–26 FAFSA: Opened December 1, 2024 ✅ (currently open)
- 2026–27 FAFSA: Opens December 1, 2025
- 2027–28 FAFSA: Opens December 1, 2026
Why December 1 instead of October 1? The FAFSA Simplification Act changed the FAFSA to use 'prior-prior year' tax data — your tax return from two years before the aid year. This allows families to use already-filed tax returns (pulled directly from the IRS) rather than estimated income. The December 1 opening gives more families time to have their prior-year taxes completed and available in the IRS system.
For the 2026–27 FAFSA: You will use your 2024 federal tax return. If you filed your 2024 taxes in spring 2025, that data will be available for the FAFSA when it opens December 1, 2025.
Why Submitting on Opening Day Matters
The gap between the FAFSA opening date (December 1) and the federal deadline (June 30 of the following year) is over 18 months — which might make it seem like there's plenty of time. There isn't, for most aid types.
Why early submission matters:
- State grants are first-come, first-served: Illinois (ISAC MAP Grant), Washington State Need Grant, Pennsylvania State Grant, and many other state programs distribute aid until funds run out. These programs regularly exhaust their annual budgets within days or weeks of the FAFSA opening — not months. Students who submit in January or February often find no funds remaining.
- Institutional aid runs out early: Many colleges allocate their own grant and scholarship funds to students in order of FAFSA submission. Students who submit in December and January get the first look at institutional aid pools.
- Priority deadlines are strict: State priority deadlines (often February 1 – March 1) are not soft guidelines — missing them means permanently losing eligibility for state grants, not just getting less. There is usually no appeal for missing state priority deadlines.
- School priority deadlines trigger the best packages: Colleges package financial aid in order of FAFSA receipt. Submitting before the school's priority date (often February 1) maximizes your chances of receiving grants over loans.
What to Do Before the FAFSA Opens
The best time to prepare for FAFSA submission is before December 1. Here's exactly what to do in advance:
- Create your StudentAid.gov account (FSA ID) now — don't wait until December 1. FSA ID verification through the Social Security Administration takes 1–3 business days. If your FSA ID isn't verified when the FAFSA opens, you cannot submit on day one. Create at studentaid.gov.
- Parents also need an FSA ID — if you are a dependent student, one parent must also have an FSA ID. Both the student's and parent's FSA IDs must be created and verified before submitting. Each must have a separate email address.
- Verify your 2023 tax return is filed (for the 2025-26 FAFSA) or your 2024 return (for 2026-27 FAFSA) — the FAFSA uses the IRS Data Retrieval Tool to pull your tax data automatically. File your taxes as early as possible in tax season so IRS records are ready when you submit the FAFSA.
- Gather non-tax financial information — bank account balances, investment account values (non-retirement), and records of untaxed income (child support received, veterans benefits) that must be entered manually.
- Know your school list — have the school codes ready for every college you want to include on the FAFSA. You can list up to 20 schools.
What You Need to Complete the FAFSA
Having everything ready before you start prevents mid-form delays and errors.
Student and parent information needed:
- Social Security numbers (student and parents, for dependent students)
- FSA ID (username and password) for both student and at least one parent
- Alien registration number (if applicable — non-citizens)
- 2023 federal tax return information (or 2024 for 2026-27 FAFSA) — the IRS DRT imports this automatically if taxes are filed
- Records of untaxed income (Social Security benefits, child support received, interest income not on tax return)
- Current bank account balances (checking and savings)
- Investment account values (non-retirement brokerage, real estate other than primary home)
- Records of any financial aid received previously (for returning students)
What you do NOT need:
- Your parents' entire tax return — the IRS DRT transfers this automatically
- Proof of enrollment — the FAFSA is submitted before enrollment is confirmed; schools use it to package aid based on your declared intention to enroll
- Transcripts or GPA — academic performance is not part of the FAFSA (it determines need-based aid only, not merit aid)
After Submitting — What Happens Next
After submitting the FAFSA, you will receive a Student Aid Report (SAR) within 1–3 business days (usually within hours if everything goes smoothly).
Steps after FAFSA submission:
- Review your Student Aid Report (SAR) for errors — incorrect income figures or mismatched Social Security numbers are common
- Make corrections through your StudentAid.gov account if needed
- Your FAFSA data is sent to all schools you listed — financial aid offices begin packaging aid
- Schools send financial aid offer letters in spring (February–April) — compare offers carefully
- Accept your school's aid package by the deadline (typically May 1 for fall enrollment)
